Trump willing to testify under oath in US-Russia probe

US president Donald Trump boards Air Force One, for travel to Switzerland to attend the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos, from Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, January 24, 2018. /Reuters
US president Donald Trump boards Air Force One, for travel to Switzerland to attend the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos, from Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, January 24, 2018. /Reuters

President Donald

Trump

said on Wednesday he would be willing to be interviewed under oath by special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigating Russian meddling in the 2016 US election.

"I'm looking forward to it, actually,"

Trump, speaking to reporters at the White House, said of an interview with Mueller, a former FBI Director. "I would do it under oath."

Although

Trump

has pledged cooperation with Mueller's probe before,

he

made his assertion as the White House and allies in Congress have stepped up attacks on the investigation's credibility and

Trump

himself has hedged on whether he would answer questions.

His attorneys have been talking to Mueller's team about an interview, according to sources with knowledge of the investigation.

"I would like to do it as soon as possible,"

Trump

said.

Trump, however, said that setting a date certain for an interview would be "subject to my lawyers and all of that." Asked whether he thought Mueller would treat him fairly,

Trump

replied, "We're going to find out."

Ty Cobb, the lawyer in charge of the White House response to Mueller's probe, said

Trump

was speaking hurriedly and intended only to say that he was willing to meet with the special counsel's team, the New York Times reported.

"He’s ready to meet with them, but he’ll be guided by the advice of his personal counsel,” the newspaper quoted Cobb as saying. Cobb said that Mueller’s team and

Trump's personal lawyers were working out the arrangements for a meeting.

Sources told Reuters earlier Wednesday that senior US intelligence officers including CIA director Mike Pompeo have been questioned by the special counsel's team about whether

Trump

tried to obstruct justice in the Russia probe.

Such questioning is further indication that Mueller's criminal investigation into purported Russian interference in the election and potential collusion by

Trump's campaign includes examining the president's actions around the probe.

In his remarks to reporters on Wednesday,

Trump

repeated past statements that there was no collusion between the campaign and Russia and "there's no obstruction whatsoever."

The Kremlin has denied conclusions by US intelligence agencies that Russia interfered in the election campaign using hacking and propaganda to try to tilt the race in

Trump's favor.

Trump

on Wednesday denied a Washington Post report that last year he had asked then-acting FBI director Andrew McCabe whom he had voted for in 2016, which reportedly left McCabe concerned about civil servants being interrogated about their political leanings.

"I don't think so. I don't think I did. I don't know what's the big deal with that, because I would ask you,"

Trump

said to reporters.

In interviews last year with Pompeo, National Intelligence director Dan Coats and National Security Agency director Admiral Mike Rogers, the sources said Mueller's team focused on whether

Trump

had asked them to lean on James Comey, the Federal Bureau of Investigation Director until

Trump

fired him in May.

Comey said

Trump

dismissed him to try to undermine the agency's Russia investigation. His firing led to Mueller's appointment to take over the FBI probe and is central to whether

Trump

may have committed obstruction of justice.

Mueller also asked the officials if

Trump

tried to shut down intelligence investigations into Russian election meddling and into contacts between Russian officials connected with President Vladimir Putin's government and associates of

Trump

or his campaign, the sources said on condition of anonymity.

Representatives for the CIA declined to comment on whether Pompeo had been interviewed.

More than 20 White House personnel have voluntarily given interviews to Mueller’s team, Fox News reported Wednesday.

It is unusual for FBI interviews to be conducted under oath, but even if

Trump

is not interviewed by Mueller's team under oath, it would still be a crime for him to lie to federal agents, said Andrew Wright, a professor at Savannah Law School and a former associate counsel to president Barack Obama.

That is the charge to which former

Trump

National Security Adviser Michael Flynn and former

Trump

campaign adviser George Papadopoulos have both pleaded guilty.

An oath would be administered if Mueller issues a subpoena for

Trump

to testify before a grand jury as opposed to a private interview, Wright said.

In 1998, charges that then-president Bill Clinton lied under oath to a federal grand jury about his affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky help lead to his impeachment by the US House of Representatives. Clinton was acquitted.

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